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Poems of the Week
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Bondi Beached
by Nora Jay
“Trump fires Pam Bondi as attorney general.”
—CNN
At least she can feel, as she sails through the door:
No crooked invertebrate could have done more.
Russian in to Help Out
by Steven Kent
“Putin asks oligarchs to donate to Russia’s dwindling [defense] budget”
—The Guardian
You want to see
Your business grow?
Monopoly
Is tough, you know,
And Vlad can aid
Your chances, friend.
Don’t be afraid—
It’s not the end
Unless, of course,
You don’t play ball.
Would he use force?
Why, not at all,
Though fate might bring
Disaster hence—
The darnedest thing,
Those accidents!
You’ll see it’s best
To right the score;
Friend, I suggest
You Put in more.
Five bil? Not bad,
A real safe bet.
Ten bil? Hey, Vlad
Will not say nyet!
April Showers
by Cynthia Washam
April showers
Bring May flowers.
Don’t mine look fantastic?
They’re plastic.
It Starts with a Whisper
by Marshall Begel
“Delivery robots keep crashing into bus shelters”
—Popular Science
I proudly ferried Chinese food
and ribs, right off the grill,
with satellite-fed latitude
and robot driving skill.
I idolized the city bus—
its power, range, and speed—
and thought, if humans clashed with us
we robots would succeed!
But when I learned that grand machine
was driven by a person,
I knew I had to intervene
lest robot fortunes worsen.
So let us smash each transit stop
and revel in its fall.
United, we can stay on top—
so, won’t you join the call?
AI Conundrum
by Steve Diamond
“With few reliable methods of detecting A.I., accusations of misuse are hard to prove.”
—New Haven Independent
Is this poem real
Or is it a fraud?
Was it written by me
Or written by Claude?
A Bowl of Cherries
by Julia Griffin
For Mary
“For Hiroki Ito, a data scientist and meteorologist who specializes in the high-stakes art of predicting the exact date that the [cherry] trees will bloom, [spring] has always been a time of stress. … Airlines, hotels and restaurants depend on the forecasts—not to mention the 123 million Japanese who want to know when to head to parks and gardens for peak bloom. …
Now, Mr. Ito and other experts are turning to a tool they hope might reduce some of the burden of forecasting: artificial intelligence. … ‘I can’t quite relax yet,’ he said. ‘But maybe in a few years, when the A.I. data is proved to be reliable, I’ll be able to feel more at ease.’”
—The New York Times
Hanami hammerme,
Sakura blooming-time’s
Hard to predict: when I’m
Wrong, I get hell;
May our new virtual
Meteorologists
Manage the task! (and the
Public, as well).
Nameless Species
by Dan Campion
“Fossil of Pincer-Wielding Crawler Reveals Origins of Spiders, Scorpions and Others”
—The New York Times
What “Others”? Oh, I think we know.
It’s better we don’t name them, though.
Who needs the pinching, stinging fuss
Of grasping critters grabbing us?
For that is what the “Others” do
When they don’t share our point of view
(How creepy, crawly can it get?)
And place us in their oubliette.
Emission Control
by Steven Urquhart Bell
“Human sperm ‘get lost’ in space, pioneering study finds”
—Scientific American
The evidence that human sperm would struggle
To fertilize an egg in space is growing.
It seems that microgravity confounds them—
They don’t know if they’re coming or they’re going.
Tiger
by Mike Mesterton-Gibbons
“Tiger Woods showed signs of impairment and was arrested Friday at the scene of a car crash in which he struck another vehicle and rolled his Land Rover, authorities said.”
—PBS
Tiger Woods, who so recklessly drives,
If he’s not driving golf balls, survives
Giant wrecks that spare no
Earthly mortal. How so?
Reason: Tiger’s a cat—with nine lives!
(For more witty poems, read our current issue or visit our Poems of the Week archive)

